Four Argentine men who survived a terror attack in New York are pleading for love and justice as they mourn their five friends killed this week.
Eight people died and about a dozen others were injured when a man drove a truck onto a bike path in lower Manhattan on Tuesday. Of those killed, five were among a group of 10 Argentine men who had traveled to New York to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their high school graduation.
“What has the world turned into? How could someone think of, plan and execute something like this? We can’t wrap our heads around it,” survivor Guillermo Banchini said in a prepared statement on behalf of his friends.
Three of Banchini’s friends were unharmed while one was injured.
“Let there be justice. Hopefully this doesn’t happen again. Not here and not anywhere else in the world,” Banchini said Friday at the Argentine Consulate in New York.
The Argentines killed were Hernán Diego Mendoza, Diego Enrique Angelini, Alejandro Damián Pagnucco, Ariel Erlij and Hernán Ferruchi, Argentina’s Foreign Affairs Ministry said.
A Belgium woman, Ann-Laure Decadt, 31, as well as two Americans, Darren Drake, 32, and Nicholas Cleves, 23, were also killed in the attack.
The suspect, Sayfullo Saipov, was arrested on federal terrorism charges. He didn’t enter a plea to charges in his first court appearance Wednesday.
The survivors said they are hurting after their dream trip quickly turned into a nightmare.
“We will forever mourn our friends. It was love that brought us here and love will continue to unite us,” the statement said.
“We want to make a plea: that love conquers hate, that life overcomes death.”
The friends said they will be traveling back to comfort their late friends’ families in their hometown of Rosario, a town nearly 200 miles northwest of Buenos Aires.
“We have to go now. We want to go back to our families, our children, our wives and our parents and siblings. Let us go home with our pain,” Banchini said.